Has anyone done any research on remote viewing places that are non-physical such as Minecraft servers or pen&paper roleplaying games where the world (supposedly) exists only in the collective imagination of the players? It would have some metaphysical repercussions if these kind of things are valid targets and produce data similar to real-world places.
I think it is likely that RV would work for fictional targets. Fictions can used as targets for associative remote viewing.
I think the question remains, what is real? Ideas are recognized objects of our perception. But do they exist independently, without the perceiving mind, in any other sense?
Consider the fictional character Sherlock Holmes. Would the RVer feel the rough tweed of Sherlock’s deerstalker hat, or smell his pipe tobacco, or his damp overcoat? None of these things actually exist. How rich, perceptually, are fictional targets? If they are indeed accessible to the RVer’s physical senses, can we say, then, that they exist? Can the real be distinguished from the unreal?
THE BEST TEST TO RV A "VIRTUAL WORLD".... WOULD BE TO RV ...."CELLULAR AUTOMATON"........THEN RV....
THE ...."SUPERFORMULA".......... because "INFINITE" VIDEO GAME WORLDS...LIKE ...."NO MANS SKY"... ALL USE THE SAME
TECH....
Controlled Remove Viewing (CRV), as created by Ingo Swann and taught by Lyn Buchannan, works by constructing a copy of the target in your own personal space.
In the occult we call this the astral, generally.
So you can visit this construct and describe it as it exists in your realty, or you can use different kind of viewing and visit the construct that exists in the collective reality.